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      How Movement Modulates Hearing

      1 , 2 , 1
      Annual Review of Neuroscience
      Annual Reviews

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          Abstract

          Hearing is often viewed as a passive process: Sound enters the ear, triggers a cascade of activity through the auditory system, and culminates in an auditory percept. In contrast to a passive process, motor-related signals strongly modulate the auditory system from the eardrum to the cortex. The motor modulation of auditory activity is most well documented during speech and other vocalizations but also can be detected during a wide variety of other sound-generating behaviors. An influential idea is that these motor-related signals suppress neural responses to predictable movement-generated sounds, thereby enhancing sensitivity to environmental sounds during movement while helping to detect errors in learned acoustic behaviors, including speech and musicianship. Findings in humans, monkeys, songbirds, and mice provide new insights into the circuits that convey motor-related signals to the auditory system, while lending support to the idea that these signals function predictively to facilitate hearing and vocal learning.

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          Most cited references68

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          Pupil fluctuations track fast switching of cortical states during quiet wakefulness.

          Neural responses are modulated by brain state, which varies with arousal, attention, and behavior. In mice, running and whisking desynchronize the cortex and enhance sensory responses, but the quiescent periods between bouts of exploratory behaviors have not been well studied. We found that these periods of "quiet wakefulness" were characterized by state fluctuations on a timescale of 1-2 s. Small fluctuations in pupil diameter tracked these state transitions in multiple cortical areas. During dilation, the intracellular membrane potential was desynchronized, sensory responses were enhanced, and population activity was less correlated. In contrast, constriction was characterized by increased low-frequency oscillations and higher ensemble correlations. Specific subtypes of cortical interneurons were differentially activated during dilation and constriction, consistent with their participation in the observed state changes. Pupillometry has been used to index attention and mental effort in humans, but the intracellular dynamics and differences in population activity underlying this phenomenon were previously unknown.
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            Neural basis of the spontaneous optokinetic response produced by visual inversion.

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              Human brain: left-right asymmetries in temporal speech region.

              We have found marked anatomical asymmetries between tile upper surfaces of the human right and left temporal lobes. The planum temporale (the area behind Hesch's gyrus) is larger on the left in 65 percent of brains; on the right it is larger in only 11 percent. The left planum is on the average one-third longer than the planum. This area makes up part of the temporal speech cortex, whose importance is well established on the basis of both anatomical findings in aphasic patients ans cortical stimulation at operation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annual Review of Neuroscience
                Annu. Rev. Neurosci.
                Annual Reviews
                0147-006X
                1545-4126
                July 08 2018
                July 08 2018
                : 41
                : 1
                : 553-572
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Neurobiology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA;
                [2 ]Current affiliation: Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York, New York 10003, USA
                Article
                10.1146/annurev-neuro-072116-031215
                6201761
                29986164
                2aeab946-6c2d-4485-9077-a1d4741ebcb1
                © 2018
                History

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